
Oncogene (2013) 32, 3470–3476 & 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved 0950-9232/13 www.nature.com/onc SHORT COMMUNICATION Profiling phospho-signaling networks in breast cancer using reverse-phase protein arrays TS Gujral1,2, RL Karp1, A Finski1,3, M Chan1, PE Schwartz4, G MacBeath1,2 and P Sorger1 Measuring the states of cell signaling pathways in tumor samples promises to advance the understanding of oncogenesis and identify response biomarkers. Here, we describe the use of Reverse Phase Protein Arrays (RPPAs or RPLAs) to profile signaling proteins in 56 breast cancers and matched normal tissue. In RPPAs, hundreds to thousands of lysates are arrayed in dense regular grids and each grid is probed with a different antibody (100 in the current work, of which 71 yielded strong signals with breast tissue). Although RPPA technology is quite widely used, measuring changes in phosphorylation reflective of protein activation remains challenging. Using repeat deposition and well-validated antibodies, we show that diverse patterns of phosphorylation can be monitored in tumor samples and changes mapped onto signaling networks in a coherent fashion. The patterns are consistent with biomarker-based classification of breast cancers and known mechanisms of oncogenesis. We explore in detail one tumor-associated pattern that involves changes in the abundance of the Axl receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) and phosphorylation of the cMet RTK. Both cMet and Axl have been implicated in breast cancer, or in resistance to anticancer drugs, but the two RTKs are not known to be linked functionally. Protein depletion and overexpression studies in a ‘triple-negative’ breast cell line reveal cross talk between Axl and cMet involving Axl-mediated modification of cMet, a requirement for cMet in efficient and timely signal transduction by the Axl ligand Gas6 and the potential for the two receptors to interact physically. These findings have potential therapeutic implications, as they imply that bi-specific receptor inhibitors (for example, ATP-competitive small-kinase inhibitors such as GSK1363089, BMS-777607 or MP470) may be more efficacious than the mono-specific therapeutic antibodies currently in development (for example, Onartuzumab). Oncogene (2013) 32, 3470–3476; doi:10.1038/onc.2012.378; published online 3 September 2012 Keywords: reverse-phase protein arrays; breast cancer; tumor lysate; cell signaling; MET; AXL Oncogenic selection functions at the level of networks and antibodies contributes to the overall signal. Nonetheless, several pathways rather than individual genes.1 To date, most multiplex studies have shown that RPPA technology is effective in mapping analyses of clinical specimens have involved genomic data intracellular signaling networks in cell lines.3,10–13 Here, we ask because measurement of gene sequences and expression levels whether RPPAs can also be used to analyze phosphorylation- is reliable and relatively simple. However, expression profiling mediated signal transduction in human tumor samples. does not report directly on regulation at the level of protein The current study is a collaboration between a company abundance or post-translational modification, both of which are specializing in rapid processing of surgical tissues and an required to understand the activities of signaling pathways.2 academic group experienced in RPPA analysis (samples of Protein state can be assayed using conventional immunoblotting, the lysates analyzed in this paper are available from www. but this technique has relatively low throughput. The throughput proteinbiotechnologies.com for those who wish to follow up our of mass spectrometry (LC/MS) is much greater in terms of total experiments). Analyzing post-translational modifications in clinical number of data-points but relatively large samples are required, a samples require that biopsies be processed rapidly to minimize problem when working with clinical specimens, and assaying degradation and dephosphorylation: tissue ischemia alters the many samples remains slow. In the past few years, ‘Reverse-phase’ expression of 10–15% of all genes within 15 min of resection, and protein microarrays (RPPAs) have emerged as a way to perform B30% of all proteins change in abundance within 30 min.14 To high-throughput immune-based assays on small amounts of minimize the changes in protein abundance and phosphorylation, material. In an RPPA, thousands of lysates are arrayed in a tumors were flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen within 5–10 min of dense, regular grid onto glass-supported nitrocellulose pads resection. Adjacent normal tissue was also collected and mounted on a microscope slide, which is then probed with a processed in parallel. Frozen tissue was minced and homogenized different antibody.3–8 Subsequent visualization of the bound in cold modified RIPA buffer and total protein levels were antibody on each spot provides a quantitative measure of specific quantified (Bio-Rad Laboratories). Tumors included the major antigens in immobilized samples. A drawback of this approach is histotypes and stages of breast cancer: most cases (n ¼ 48) were that only a small subset of antibodies are sufficiently selective to classified as ductal carcinoma of varying grade; mucinous and work in an RPPA format9 largely, because off-target binding by intraductal cancers were represented by three samples each; 1Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; 2Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA; 3Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA and 4Protein Biotechnologies Inc., Ramona, CA, USA. Correspondence: Dr G MacBeath or Professor P Sorger, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, WAB 438, 200 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA. E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected] Received 23 March 2012; revised 26 June 2012; accepted 13 July 2012; published online 3 September 2012 Studying cell signaling in breast tumor samples TS Gujral et al 3471 and lobular and a metaplastic tumors by one sample (Supplemen- have been screened by us and by others8,9 to identify the B5% of tary Table S1). commercial antibodies that exhibit sufficient specificity in multiple Approximately 100 arrays were printed from normal and tumor- cell lines (Figure 1b), particularly for the phosphorylated forms of derived extracts (B10 mg total protein per extract), with each array receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), and the cytosolic and nuclear receiving eight depositions per spot to increase the signal-to-noise proteins they regulate (Figure 1c). To validate, antibodies are ratio. Arrays were adhered to bottomless microtiter plates, screened against a variety of ‘biological contexts’ using lysate allowing rapid processing of 100 arrays with 100 different primary microarrays. Each context represents a specific combination of antibodies (Figure 1a). Slides were incubated with dye-labeled cellular type and treatment conditions. Based on the statistical secondary antibodies and scanned to quantify fluorescence levels significance of the resulting measurements, promising antibody– on a spot-by-spot basis. Primary antibodies were directed against context pairs are further evaluated by quantitative western proteins, or phosphorylated forms of proteins, known to have a blotting. If the two data sets agree (R2X0.7), the then antibody role in oncogenic signal transduction. Several thousand antibodies is considered ‘validated’ for use. Using this strategy, we screened Matched Normal-tumor lysates Duplicate 56 Normal spots lysates } Case 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Normal 56 Tumor Tumor fold lysates difference Control in signal ratio tumor to normal Activity Ratio microarrays in microtiter plates 123Case probed with 96 antibodies 112 lysates X 100 antibodies RPPA 71 Positive Signals Validated Antibodies MD Anderson HMS 16 Platform Platform 20 (Pan) (receptor) (total 100) (total 82) 51 49 33 46 35 (pS/T) (9 Pan, (27 Pan, (27 Pan, 1* (cytosolic) 7 (TF) 42 PTM) 22 PTM) 6 PTM) 15 (pY) 2§ Patient by Patient Normal Tumor 1.0 56 Normal lysates 56 Tumor lysates 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 Her2 Her2 levels( A.U) 0.0 patient # Average 71 protein antibodies 0.6 * Normal Tumor 0.4 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0.2 Reative signal intensity Her2 levels( A.U) 0.0 Figure 1. Studying signal transduction in clinical samples by RPPA analysis in patient-matched normal and tumor lysates from 56 cases of breast cancer. (a) Schematic of the RPPA screen. Lysates from 56 tumor and corresponding normal samples were arrayed onto nitrocellulose pads, assembled into microtiter plates, and probed with a collection of 100 primary antibodies. A ‘fold-difference’ in protein measurements was calculated by dividing the activity ratio of a tumor sample by the activity ratio of its matched normal sample. (b) Venn diagram of antibodies validated for RPPAs at HMS and MD Anderson.8,9 (c) Breakdown of the 71 antibodies yielding positive signals for breast cancer samples by target and localization. Seventy percent of all antibodies (50/71) were phospho-specific, recognizing modifications that are known to be involved in protein activation. * denotes ‘caspase cleavage’; y denotes ‘other’subcellular localization. (d) A heatmap of ‘activity ratios’ of 71 protein measurements in 56 normal and corresponding tumor samples. The protein level distribution of HER2/neu across normal (red) and tumor (blue) samples is also highlighted. Lower bar graph showing an average relative intensity of HER2/neu in all
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